Rosario has made the transition to Double-A look like a breeze. Since he was promoted on June 23, the No. 69 overall prospect has done nothing but rake. Including Thursday's 3-for-4 effort, Rosario is hitting .429 with 12 RBIs in 16 games for Binghamton.

Newcomb, the No. 17 overall prospect, struggled in his last outing but has shown an ability to pitch well in his first season with the Braves' organization. The left-hander has struggled with control at times, as he walked five batters in four innings in his last start, but he also possesses an ability to rack up the strikeouts. Newcomb fanned 168 batters last season (136 innings) and has struck out 81 in 82 2/3 frames this year.

Hess had a rough patch in which he allowed 20 earned runs in 10 2/3 innings, but he appeared to get back on track in his last outing. The right-hander gave up three runs in 6 1/3 on July 3, marking his longest outing in a little bit more than a month. Friday's start against Reading will be a good barometer as to whether Hess has straightened things out.

Eshelman was simply brilliant in June. The right-hander allowed two earned runs in 17 innings across four starts and was then promoted to Triple-A. However, that run of success came to a screeching halt when the calendar flipped to July. Eshelman, making his first start of the month, gave up six runs in 1 2/3 frames on the 3rd. Making his second start of July, the Phillies' prospect will look to erase that last outing and get back to being the pitcher that began the year throwing so well.